Great Barrington Public Theater Announces 2026 Summer Season

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Great Barrington Public Theater (GBPT) Artistic Directors, Jim Frangione and Judy Braha, along with Managing Director, Serena Johnson, announced the upcoming summer 2026 season. 
 
"We'll present a season of world premiere plays at a newly-configured, intimate black box theater in the Great Hall at Saint James Place, with upgraded lighting and seating elements to create a unique space to embrace these provocative new plays," said GBPT Artistic Director Jim Frangione. 
 
The Season will begin with "Fragments," written and performed by Jim Petosa, and directed by GBPT Artistic Director Judy Braha. This new script, and inlate April there will be a sneak peak of the piece, a developmental reading on May 2 at 4 PM.  This will create the launch pad for us to move into rehearsal and performance of Fragments as our season opener in late June. 
 
"In a world where it has become more and more common for history to be eroded, rewritten or erased entirely, Jim Petosa's new play, Fragments, is a gift," Director Judy Braha said. "Doing what the theater does best, this piece is a memoir of a very specific time and place that shines a light on the turbulent years from 1985-90 when the world was overtaken by the AIDS crisis. This is a very personal story of one couple's pathway through it together." 
 
"This memory play is written as a series of episodes.  I call them fragments. For many years, these fragments were told as oral histories to friends who had the patience and the interest to hear them. Over time, each fragment evolved to have a shape, an appreciation for certain details, certain words that were said. Sharing these stories has shown me that they encourage each listener to reflect on their own experiences with loss, grief, and resilience. Alongside surprising moments of happiness and celebration, there is also a distinct appreciation for life's absurdities,"added Playwright Jim Petosa."The mystery within these memories creates a sense of kinship among us, transforming despair into hope." 
 
Next up for the summer will be "iBoss," written by Thomas Kee and directed by Clay Hopper, director of last year's show "How To Not Save the World with Mr. Bezos."
 
According to a press release:
 
Taking place in a not so distant future, the rapidly accelerating intelligence of AI systems has created "Lisa." Powered by AI, she wields enormous power. Shockingly, Lisa displays an emergent property of AI — sentience. And from this newly sentient being something else emerges: an emotional agenda. As Job Johnson begins his first in-person evaluation, it's clear this isn't going to be just another day at the office. 
 
"So many people, so much of our diversity could potentially be lost as we are zoomed in on just one, two or three large language models, which are just feeding us this ready-to-go content. So, that is very much at the root of the dialogue of this play," Playwright Thomas Kee said.  
 
"Any disruptive technology brings with it questions, but I can't think of any in our collective past that brings up such profound ones as the rise of AI and Large Language Models. Questions we normally relegate to the fringes are now suddenly front and center: "What is the nature of consciousness?" "Can it be created?" "Are our tools a reflection of us, or do they have their own rules?". Not to mention the political, social, and moral implications of outsourcing cognition. This play exposes all of the peril and possibility contained in our present moment, and like all good plays, it does it through character, intention, and situation, with dialogue that truly crackles with the sound of life itself," added Director Clay Hopper.
 
The Season will close with "Yellow Wallpaper 2.0 - 2020," written by Jennifer Maisel and directed by GBPT Artistic Director, Judy Braha. 
 
According to a press release:
 
A riff on Charlotte Perkins Gilman's classic domestic horror story about a woman driven crazy by the rest cure for postpartum depression, "YELLOW WALLPAPER 2.0 - 2020" is about a female adjunct professor trying to thrive in COVID quarantine despite her toddler and demanding husband outside her bedroom and the personal demons she faces within.
 
"This play takes us down the rabbit hole of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's profound short story The Yellow Wallpaper, written in 1892, but re-imagined here in the early days of the pandemic," said Director Judy Braha. "An overwhelmed adjunct professor, newly a mother, struggles to make sense of their suddenly chaotic reality, her postpartum depression and the mysteries hidden inside their inherited "prewar-6" apartment on the Upper West Side. With humor, social critique and the quivering bones of a horror story, Jennifer Maisel's wonderful play will sweep you down the rabbit hole with our heroine, T, and bring you face to face with her deep- 2020 dilemmas, passions and choices." 
 
"When the pandemic hit, my mind kept returning to Charlotte Perkins Gilman's 1892 feminist short story, THE YELLOW WALLPAPER, an evocative tale of a woman confined to her room by her physician husband who has diagnosed her with hysteria; the storyteller develops a relationship with a woman she sees trapped behind the yellow wallpaper that obsesses her.  The story originated with Gilman's own experience of being forced into a rest cure for years of depression," Playwright Jennifer Maisel added. "The spirit, emotion and circumstance of Gilman's story seemed so resonant of quarantine and the feminist issues of that day are sadly still relevant now. And there I saw it, a female professor, intoxicated with Gilman, forced into isolation because of the COVID crisis – and 'YELLOW WALLPAPER 2.0 – 2020' came to be." 
 
The company will perform all three shows at The Great Hall in Saint James Place, in downtown Great Barrington at 352 Main St, Great Barrington, MA 01230. Season Subscription tickets for the new season will go on sale today, March 4 on the GBPT website and by phone 413-372-1980. Single tickets will be going on sale in April. 
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Connecticut Man Killed in Otis Tractor-Trailer Crash

OTIS, Mass. — Thursday's collision between two tractor-trailers on Route 8 killed one of the drivers. 
 
Antonio Luis Marcucci, 32 of Waterbury, Conn., was northbound at about 9 a.m. Thursday when he apparently lost control of the truck and veered into the southbound lanes, colliding head-on with a southbound tractor trailer, according to police. 
 
According to the Berkshire District Attorney's Office, police dispatched to 1322 South Main Road found the truck with Connecticut plates in the northbound lane and a truck bearing Oklahoma plates lodged in a snowback on south side. 
 
The officer began rendering aid to the northbound driver, identified as Marcucci. He was pinned inside the cab of his truck. He was extracated and transported to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield by Otis EMS, where he was pronounced dead.
 
The driver of the Oklahoma tractor trailer in the southbound lane did not receive serious injuries.
 
Early investigation, including dash camera footage captured by one of the tractor trailers, shows the Oklahoma tractor trailer was traveling in the southbound lane and the Connecticut tractor trailer was traveling in the northbound lane, according to the DA's Office. The Connecticut tractor trailer lost control veering off the other side of the road ultimately ending on the southbound lane. Shortly after the two tractor trailers collided in a head on collision.
 
The investigation remains ongoing.
 
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